[LibreJS][0] is a browser extension developed by GNU which ensures only Free (libre) JavaScript is run. To determine whether given JavaScript is Free, LibreJS consults metadata included in the JavaScript file. Since Miniflux is Free Software, getting its JavaScript to work when LibreJS is installed is just a matter of adding license metadata to the returned JavaScript source.
[0]: https://www.gnu.org/software/librejs/index.html
The original idea was to have two digit precision at all time
in order to ensure the length of the string is always the same.
This prevents the UI button to move when pressed.
I completely missed the first press as the precision was not right
upon first click.
This adds a new "description" field to the feed settings. This allows to
save custom description regarding a feed. It is also exported and
imported as "description" in OPML.
When listening to podcast, it is usual to want to speed up the playback.
https://github.com/miniflux/v2/pull/2521 was addressing the need globally, this PR
allow to address it for just the current open enclosure media. (no save) Some Browser
already include this control directly, but firefox does not (directly anyway).
Also, it is often useful to be able to skip chunk of a podcast, to skip commercials
for example, or get back a bit because we couldn't hear the last part. I added rudimentary
seek controls with the usual +/-10 and 30 seconds chuck size. This is pretty handy when podcast
are very long and using the seek bar is way too tricky to just skip 30s.
As always, I'm French and could only provide English and French translation for the few
text I added in the locale/translations files. Any help is welcome.
Tested mostly on Firefox (121.0) and quickly on Vivaldi(6.5.3206.53), chrome based.
Fixes: #1845#1846
When clicking the unread counter, the following exception occurs:
```
Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read properties of null (reading 'getAttribute')
```
This is due to `onClickMainMenuListItem` not working correctly for the
unread counter `span`s, which return `null` when using `querySelector`.
This commit adds a policy, and make use of it in the Content-Security-Policy.
I've tested it the best I could, both on a modern browser supporting
trusted-types (Chrome) and on one that doesn't (firefox).
Thanks to @lweichselbaum for giving me a hand to wrap this up!
- Don't use lambdas to return a function, use directly the function instead.
- Remove a hack for "Chrome 67 and earlier" since it was released in 2018.
- replace a lot of `let` with `const`
- inline some `querySelectorAll` calls
- reduce the scope of some variables
- use some ternaries where it makes sense
- inline one-line functions